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The Worried Well: The depression epidemic and the medicalisation of our sorrows

In The Worried Well: The Depression Epidemic and the Medicalisation of Our Sorrows, Gail Bell investigates Australia's depression epidemic. Why, she wonders, do well over a million Australians now take antidepressant drugs?

This is a fresh, frank and independent look at the depression culture and the move to medicalise sadness. Bell examines how the prescription culture operates, scrutinising the role of big drug companies and GPs and talking to those who take - and don't take - the new antidepressants, from anxious students to lonely retirees. She finds that drug companies have invested billions in an effort to simplify a profoundly complex mental condition, and that along the way ordinary problems of living have been transformed into medical conditions. She also finds that we, the consumers, have been happy to get on board: the vocabulary of depression - "serotonin", "bipolar", "genetic predisposition" - rolls off our tongues as if each of us had studied it at medical school.

In this freeranging and elegant essay, Bell takes the pulse of Australia's "worried well" and looks at alternative cures for what ails us.

About the author

Gail Bell is the author of Quarterly Essay 18: The Worried Well – The Depression Epidemic and the Medicalisation of Our Sorrows. Her first book, The Poison Principle, won the NSW premier’s prize for …